Dr. Donald C. Johanson originally insisted that A. afarensis was the direct ancestor of man. In fact, the phrase “the dramatic discovery of our oldest human ancestor” can be found emblazoned on the cover of his 1981 book, Lucy: The Beginnings of Humankind. Numerous other evolutionists, however, strongly disagreed.
Lord Zuckerman, the famous British anatomist, published his views on the australopithecines in his book, Beyond the Ivory Tower. He studied these creatures for more than fifteen years, looking at myriads of samples, and he came to the conclusion…that if man did in fact descend from an apelike ancestor, he did so without leaving a single visible trace in the fossil record (1970, p. 64). Now some might complain, “But Lord Zuckerman’s work was done before Lucy was even discovered.” That may be true, but it misses the point.
Zuckerman’s research—which established conclusively that the australopithecines were nothing but knuckle-walking apes—was performed on fossils even younger than Lucy’s (i.e., even closer to man), showing no such evolution in the many, many fossils he examined! But how could this mistaken assessment about Lucy have happened? Well perhaps it was as Johanson himself admitted when he said “I was trying to jam evidence of dates into a pattern that would support conclusions about fossils which, on closer inspection, the fossils themselves would not sustain”(Lucy: The Beginnings of Humankind, Johanson and Edey, 1981, Penguin Publishers, London).
Hmmm? Do you see the admission of fudging to get the desired conclusion? He jammed evidence of dates into the actual data to support a conclusion already preconceived! And this is what bothers me, he sees no wrong in this? No deception? If successful he would have been fine using the lie to willfully make an untruth (at least his assumption based conclusion) appear to be THE truth? Go figure….
So what’s your “best guess” (a regular technique of Neo-Darwinians)? Did Johanson examine the evidence prior to making his decision about Lucy’s ability to walk uprightly? Or was Lucy “upright” and “walking” even before all of her fossils were uncovered—i.e., from the moment that single arm bone buried in the sand was discovered? Or could she walk uprightly as many apes do but usually spent her time knuckle walking? Why would this be “human” or even semi-human? Why exclude the possibility of her simply being an unsuccessful variety of ape? Oh that's right it doesn't fit the preconceived conclusion...we can't have that can we?
Paul
Lord Zuckerman, the famous British anatomist, published his views on the australopithecines in his book, Beyond the Ivory Tower. He studied these creatures for more than fifteen years, looking at myriads of samples, and he came to the conclusion…that if man did in fact descend from an apelike ancestor, he did so without leaving a single visible trace in the fossil record (1970, p. 64). Now some might complain, “But Lord Zuckerman’s work was done before Lucy was even discovered.” That may be true, but it misses the point.
Zuckerman’s research—which established conclusively that the australopithecines were nothing but knuckle-walking apes—was performed on fossils even younger than Lucy’s (i.e., even closer to man), showing no such evolution in the many, many fossils he examined! But how could this mistaken assessment about Lucy have happened? Well perhaps it was as Johanson himself admitted when he said “I was trying to jam evidence of dates into a pattern that would support conclusions about fossils which, on closer inspection, the fossils themselves would not sustain”(Lucy: The Beginnings of Humankind, Johanson and Edey, 1981, Penguin Publishers, London).
Hmmm? Do you see the admission of fudging to get the desired conclusion? He jammed evidence of dates into the actual data to support a conclusion already preconceived! And this is what bothers me, he sees no wrong in this? No deception? If successful he would have been fine using the lie to willfully make an untruth (at least his assumption based conclusion) appear to be THE truth? Go figure….
So what’s your “best guess” (a regular technique of Neo-Darwinians)? Did Johanson examine the evidence prior to making his decision about Lucy’s ability to walk uprightly? Or was Lucy “upright” and “walking” even before all of her fossils were uncovered—i.e., from the moment that single arm bone buried in the sand was discovered? Or could she walk uprightly as many apes do but usually spent her time knuckle walking? Why would this be “human” or even semi-human? Why exclude the possibility of her simply being an unsuccessful variety of ape? Oh that's right it doesn't fit the preconceived conclusion...we can't have that can we?
Paul
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